The Matte appears in the French language written in 1627. This feminine noun means the by-product or intermediary of the metallurgy.

A century earlier, Matte seems to indicate a gross metal expunged by hammering of its major impurities.

The term according to the Treasury of the French language or a simple dialectal analysis comes from an Indo-European Matte etymon « meaning compact, more and more compact ». Blacksmiths are not the only ones to use it, the breeders call Matte (to female) oumaton (in the masculine) curdled milk, material that can be then press or compact to white cheese in a first stage. The French former 12th-century verb matoner means curdling, coagulating. Quite surprisingly, many French etymological dictionaries often specify an obscure or uncertain origin this technical term

Matte could also be an Alsatian ment meaning "prairie": characteristic of a house located in or near a meadow

Matte is also a Word from the old french designating a sulphurous semi-metallic substance which has undergone a first cast and which is not yet in a State of purity Metallurgy, technological : Naturally found in residues of the metallurgy of nickel-bearing minerals like cobalt spies and mattes obtained by melting some silver, lead, and copper ores. -. (Henri Moissan and Léon Victor René Ouvrard, the Nickel, p. 34, Gauthier-Villars and kid, Paris, 1896

The matte, semi-metallic sulphide material, produced through the metallurgy of copper or nickel.

Other means used in the Department of Ain, is [corn] putting into stooks or mattes, kinds of apiaries or wheels that remain in the field

[DEGASPARIN, Journal. official. January 8, 1875, p. 163 3e col.]

Matte is also a word for a group of fish of a species and age or size playing together; fish bench.

The matte, a gathering or grouping of animals or plants to the use of sea men. Thus, the matte of tuna in the Mediterranean Sea. Within certain limits, the term eventually designate a specific marine biotope, example: A matte of tuna

It is also a marine term:

Quality of an uneven sea bottom and where interlaced grassland. A matte is a sedimentary accumulation trapped by Magnoliophytes eelgrass and forming a bottom elevation. Posidonia mattes can reach several meters thick.

SIGNIFICATION (Masculine word)

Judo: the break of a fight, the arm Signal shall be tensioned to the arbitrators.

Matte box: lens hood for camera system

Conjugation (Verb)

Present indicative: I matte, he/she/it matte

Subjunctive Present: that I matte, as he/she/it matte

This imperative: matte (2nd person singular)

SIGNIFICATION (other language)

English: (movies, television) mask used to blank a portion of an image another image can be superimposed.

In the talk of Geneva, matte means heap, heap.

Portuguese: Fazer uma Cópia papel em mate: make a copy on matte paper

German: carpets, German language der Lech or das Rohmetal can mean various metallurgies matte. The Anglo-Saxon and French technical worlds have the same word written matte.

The capsules # 00 are information bearing the word Matte, the capsules # 0 are of general information used to complete the capsules identified # -1 (Charles) or # 1 (Nicolas and Madeleine) or # .2 (children) , etc., which correspond to lineages of Matte ancestors.

SIGNIFICATION (female word)

Element etymological

The Matte appears in the French language written in 1627. This feminine noun means the by-product or intermediary of the metallurgy.

A century earlier, Matte seems to indicate a gross metal expunged by hammering of its major impurities.

The term according to the Treasury of the French language or a simple dialectal analysis comes from an Indo-European Matte etymon « meaning compact, more and more compact ». Blacksmiths are not the only ones to use it, the breeders call Matte (to female) oumaton (in the masculine) curdled milk, material that can be then press or compact to white cheese in a first stage. The French former 12th-century verb matoner means curdling, coagulating. Quite surprisingly, many French etymological dictionaries often specify an obscure or uncertain origin this technical term

Matte could also be an Alsatian ment meaning "prairie": characteristic of a house located in or near a meadow

Matte is also a Word from the old french designating a sulphurous semi-metallic substance which has undergone a first cast and which is not yet in a State of purity Metallurgy, technological : Naturally found in residues of the metallurgy of nickel-bearing minerals like cobalt spies and mattes obtained by melting some silver, lead, and copper ores. -. (Henri Moissan and Léon Victor René Ouvrard, the Nickel, p. 34, Gauthier-Villars and kid, Paris, 1896

The matte, semi-metallic sulphide material, produced through the metallurgy of copper or nickel.

Other means used in the Department of Ain, is [corn] putting into stooks or mattes, kinds of apiaries or wheels that remain in the field

[DEGASPARIN, Journal. official. January 8, 1875, p. 163 3e col.]

Matte is also a word for a group of fish of a species and age or size playing together; fish bench.

The matte, a gathering or grouping of animals or plants to the use of sea men. Thus, the matte of tuna in the Mediterranean Sea. Within certain limits, the term eventually designate a specific marine biotope, example: A matte of tuna

It is also a marine term:

Quality of an uneven sea bottom and where interlaced grassland. A matte is a sedimentary accumulation trapped by Magnoliophytes eelgrass and forming a bottom elevation. Posidonia mattes can reach several meters thick.

SIGNIFICATION (Masculine word)

Judo: the break of a fight, the arm Signal shall be tensioned to the arbitrators.

Matte box: lens hood for camera system

Conjugation (Verb)

Present indicative: I matte, he/she/it matte

Subjunctive Present: that I matte, as he/she/it matte

This imperative: matte (2nd person singular)

SIGNIFICATION (other language)

English: (movies, television) mask used to blank a portion of an image another image can be superimposed.

In the talk of Geneva, matte means heap, heap.

Portuguese: Fazer uma Cópia papel em mate: make a copy on matte paper

German: carpets, German language der Lech or das Rohmetal can mean various metallurgies matte. The Anglo-Saxon and French technical worlds have the same word written matte.

The capsules # 00 are information bearing the word Matte, the capsules # 0 are of general information used to complete the capsules identified # -1 (Charles) or # 1 (Nicolas and Madeleine) or # .2 (children) , etc., which correspond to lineages of Matte ancestors.